Discworld – 28 – Night Watch by Terry Pratchett

‘Well done. Mister Vimes. It’s funny how secretly you can move when you’re a loony monk dancing through the streets banging a drum.’

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‘When I was a kid most of my clothes came from the shonky shop in Clay Lane,’ said Vimes. ‘Everyone we knew got their clothes from the shonky shop. Used to be run by a foreign guy with a funny name.’

‘Brother Soon Shine Sun,’ said Sweeper. ‘Not a hugely

enlightened operative, but a genius when it comes to pricing fourthhand schmutter.’

‘Shirts so worn you could see daylight through ’em and

trousers as shiny as glass,’ said Vimes. ‘And by the end of the week half the stuff was in the pawn shop.’

‘That’s right,’ said Sweeper. ‘You’d pawn your clothes in the pawn shop, but you’d never buy clothes from the pawn shop,

‘cos there were Standards, right?’

Vimes nodded. When you got right down to the bottom of the ladder the rungs were very close together and, oh my, weren’t the women careful about them. In their own way, they were as haughty as any duchess. You might not have much, but you could have Standards. Clothes might be cheap and old but at least they could be scrubbed. There might be nothing behind the front door worth stealing but at least the doorstep could be clean enough to eat your dinner off, if you could’ve afforded dinner.

And no one ever bought their clothes from the pawn shop. You’d hit bottom when you did that. No, you bought them from Mr Sun at the shonky shop, and you never asked where he got them from.

‘I went off to my first proper job in a suit from the shonky shop,’ he said. ‘Seems like centuries ago now.’

‘No,’ said Sweeper. ‘It was only last week.’

Silence ballooned. The only sound was the purr of the

cylinders dotted around the room.

Then Sweeper added: ‘It must have occurred to you.’

‘Why? I’ve spent most of the time here being beaten up or

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unconscious or trying to get home! You mean I’in out there somewhere?’

‘Oh, yes. In fact last night you saved the day for your squad by aiming a crossbow at a dangerous miscreant who was attacking your sergeant.’

The silence ballooned larger this time. It seemed to fill the universe.

Eventually, Vimes said: ‘No. That’s not right. That never happened. I would have remembered that. And I can remember a lot about my first weeks in the job.’

‘Interesting, isn’t it?’ said Sweeper. ‘But is it not written:

“There’s a lot goes on we don’t get told”? Mister Vimes, you need a short spell in the Garden of Inner City Tranquillity.’

It was indeed a garden, like a lot of other gardens you got in areas such as Clay Lane. The grey soil was nothing more than old brick dust, elderly cat mess and generalized, semirotted dross. At the far end was a threehole privy. It was built handily by the gate to the back lane so the nightsoil men didn’t have far to go, but this one had a small stone cylinder turning gently beside it and the gate was barred shut.

The garden didn’t get much proper light. Gardens like this never did. You got secondhand light once the richer folk in the taller buildings had finished with it. Some people kept pigeons or rabbits or pigs on their plots, or planted against all experience a few vegetables. But it’d take magic beans to reach the real sunlight in gardens like this.

Nevertheless, someone had made an effort. Most of the spare ground had been covered with gravel of different sizes, and this had been carefully raked into swirls and curves. Here and there, apparently with great thought, some individual larger stones had been positioned.

Vimes stared at the garden of rocks, desperate for anything to occupy his attention.

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He could see what the designer had in mind, he thought, but the effect had been spoiled. This was the big city, after all.

Garbage got everywhere. The main disposal method was

throwing it over a wall. Sooner or later someone would sell it on or, possibly, eat it.

A young monk was carefully raking the gravel. He gave a respectful bow as Sweeper approached.

The old man sat down on a stone bench.

‘Push off and get us two cups of tea, lad, will you?’ he said.

‘One green with yak butter, and Mister Vimes will have it boiled orange in a builder’s boot with two sugars and yesterday’s milk, right?’

‘That’s how I like it,’ said Vimes weakly, sitting down.

Sweeper took a deep, long breath. ‘And I like building

gardens,’ he said. ‘Life should be a garden.’

Vimes stared blankly at what was in front of them. ‘Okay,’ he said. ‘The gravel and rocks, yes, I can see that. Shame about all the rubbish. It always turns up, doesn’t it…’

‘Yes,’ said Lu-Tze. ‘It’s part of the pattern.’

‘What? The old cigarette packet?’

‘Certainly. That invokes the element of air,’ said Sweeper.

‘And the cat doings?’

‘To remind us that disharmony, like a cat, gets everywhere.’

‘The cabbage stalks? The used sonky?’*

* Named after Wallace Sonky, a man without whose

experiments with thin rubber the pressure on housing in Ankh-Morpork would have been a good deal more pressing.

‘At our peril we forget the role of the organic in the total harmony. What arrives seemingly by chance in the pattern is part of a higher organization that we can only dimly

comprehend. This is a very important fact, and has a bearing on

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your case.’

‘And the beer bottle?’

For the first time since Vimes had met him, the monk

frowned.

‘Y’know, some bugger always tosses one over the wall on his way back from the pub on Friday nights. If it wasn’t forbidden to do that kind of thing, he’d feel the flat of my hand and no mistake.’

‘It’s not part of the higher organization?’

‘Possibly. Who cares? That sort of thing gets on my thungas, it really does,’ said Sweeper. He sat back with his hands on his knees. Serenity flowed once more. ‘Well now, Mister Vimes…

you know the universe is made up of very small items?’

‘Huh?’

‘We’ve got to work up to things gradually, Mister Vimes.

You’re a bright man. I can’t keep telling you everything is done by magic.’

‘Am I really here too? In the city? I mean, a younger me?’

‘Of course. Why not? Where was I? Oh, yes. Made up of very small items, and-‘

‘This is not a good time to be in the Watch. I remember!

There’s the curfew. And that was only the start!’

‘Small items, Mister Vimes,’ said Sweeper sharply. ‘You need to know this.’

‘Oh, all right. How small?’

‘Very, very small. So tiny that they have some very strange ways indeed.’

Vimes sighed. ‘And I ask you: what ways are these, yeah?’

‘I’in glad you asked that question. For one thing, they can be in many places at once. Try to think, Mister Vimes.’

Vimes tried to concentrate on what was probably the

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discarded fishandchip wrapper of Infinity. Oddly enough, with so many horrible thoughts crowding his head, it was almost a relief to put them on one side in order to consider this. The brain did things like that. He remembered once when he’d been stabbed and would’ve bled to death if Sergeant Angua hadn’t caught up with him, and how, as he lay there, he’d found himself taking a very intense interest in the pattern of the carpet. The senses say: we’ve only got a few minutes, let’s record

everything, in every detail…

‘That can’t be right,’ he said. ‘If this seat is made up of lots of tiny things that can be in lots of places at once, why is it standing still?’

‘Give the man a small cigar!’ said Sweeper jubilantly. That’s the big problem, Mister Vimes. And the answer, our Abbot tells us, is that it is in lots of places at once. Ah, here’s the tea. And in order for it to be in lots of places at once, the multiverse is made up of a vast number of alternative universes. An oodleplex of oodleplexes. That’s like the biggest number anyone can think of, ever. Just so’s it can accommodate all the quantum. Am I going too fast for you?’

‘Oh, that,’ said Vimes. ‘I know about that. Like, you make a decision in this universe and you made a different decision in another one. I heard the wizards talking about that at a posh reception once. They were… arguing about the Glorious Twentyfifth of May.’

‘And what were they saying?’

‘Oh, all the old stuff… that it would have turned out different if the rebels had properly guarded the gates and the bridges, that you can’t break a siege by a frontal attack. But they were saying that, in a way, everything happens somewhere

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